May
1, 2009 Flash Flooding Event
(updated 1 pm 5/01/2009)
For ongoing information
on the threat for heavy rain, flash flooding, and other severe weather,
visit the NWS Tulsa Decision
Support Page.
Additional information on ongoing and forecast
River Flooding, please visit the NWS Tulsa Rivers
& AHPS page.
Flood
Safety Information from the NWS
A very moist low-level atmosphere
developed over eastern Oklahoma and northwest Arkansas during the
last part of April and into the first part of May. Periods of heavy
rain affected the region off and on from April 26 through May 1
as a series of fronts moved through the area. Widespread rainfall
totals of 2 inches or more occurred in the 7 days prior to May 1
(from 7am on April 24th through 7am on May 1st) across northeast
and southeast Oklahoma.
By the morning of May 1st, showers
and thunderstorms developed along a cold front and an outflow boundary
left over from the day before. A combination of slow storm movement,
training of storms, and effecient rainfall production lead to very
heavy rainfall in a short period of time across northeast Oklahoma.
Rainfall rates of 2 to 3 inches per hour affected portions of Tulsa,
Rogers, Mayes, Adair and Cherokee Counties. This led to severe flash
flooding, with numerous water rescues and reports of water entering
buildings and homes. Additionally, the recent rains have led to
mainstem river flooding across northest Oklahoma, with the potential
for additional flooding across all of eastern Oklahoma and northwest
Arkansas for the next several days.
By noon, 2 to 5 inches of rain had fallen across
northern Tulsa, Rogers, Mayes, Delaware, northern Cherokee, and
northern Adair Counties. The highest totals, however, occurred over
Pryor, OK in Mayes County, where 7 inches of rain fell between 5
am and 11 am. Over 5 inches of this total fell within 1 hour between
approximately 7:30 and 8:30 am. Local news media was reporting over
25 water rescues had been performed in Pryor.
According to the Oklahoma
Climatological Survey, the daily record maximum rainfall
during the month of May in Pryor was 6.05 inches which fell on May
10, 1943 (based on a period of record from 1926-2004). As of 12:15
pm CDT, the mesonet station in Pryor had recorded 7.05 inches of
rain since midnight. The 1971-2000 average rainfall for Pryor during
the month of May is 5.02 inches.
Click
here for the Preliminary Local Storm Reports
from the NWS office in Tulsa, or here for a compiled list of Flood reports.
6 hour rainfall total ending at 11
AM CDT May 1, 2009.
|

Oklahoma Mesonet rainfall from Midnight
to Noon May 1, 2009. (Courtesy Oklahoma Climatological Survey)
|

Flooding in Claremore May 1, 2009 (Courtesy
of KJRH.com, Randy Lane)
|

Flooding in Pryor May 1, 2009 (Courtesy
of KJRH.com, Breanne Palmerini)
|

Flooding in Owasso May 1, 2009 (Courtesy
of KJRH.com, Greg Griggs)
|

Flooding in Owasso May 1, 2009 (Courtesy
of KTUL.com, Tim Bowman)
|

Flooding in Claremore May 1, 2009 (Courtesy
of KJRH.com, Randy Lane)
|

Flooding in Claremore May 1, 2009 (Courtesy
of KTUL.com, Karen Findley)
|

Flooding along Hwy 66 in Claremore May 1, 2009 (Courtesy
of KTUL.com, Brett Miller)
|
|